How to make hardwood cuttings for bonsai

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 янв 2025

Комментарии • 75

  • @VictorHHH7
    @VictorHHH7 17 дней назад +36

    Can’t wait to see the outcome of this experiment

  • @AdamArndt
    @AdamArndt 4 дня назад +2

    I do believe you are the Bob Ross of bonsai. You make happy tree's

  • @roweng.4245
    @roweng.4245 17 дней назад +7

    Back in early November, someone gave me a six inch long fresh cutting from a hawthorn tree, with red leaves and berries. They meant it as a bit of decoration, but I took it home, clipped the end, removed some strips of bark just at the base, dipped it into rooting powder, and potted it. It has been sitting by a "grow lamp" ever since. It has a lovely shape with three branches, and some little hard red buds which have not withered. I am hopeful.

  • @xplicitmentality
    @xplicitmentality 17 дней назад +6

    Never knew you can make cuttings in the winter. Good to know.

    • @ebenoid6643
      @ebenoid6643 17 дней назад

      I guess the sap is on the way down so it promotes downward growth? I think they need heat mats

    • @Benw3790
      @Benw3790 16 дней назад +2

      I bought a heat mat last year to try and make small hard wood cuttings with. i cut them, soaked them in water overnight, (like they do in Japan) and planted them the next morning into 50%organic, 50% inorganic soil mix. I used plastic containers, with clear plastic lids. I set all the containers on the heat mat, on the floor of an un heated garage. The plastic lids, produced humidity and condensation on the lids. Although I would take the lids off, once or twice a day, all the cuttings turned moldy from the moisture. 0% Success rate.

  • @AsiaPacificGarden
    @AsiaPacificGarden 17 дней назад +6

    Barnel is great! We've been using their products for many years.
    Good luck with the hardwood cuttings. We haven't had a lot of success with maple cuttings, but junipers and our tropical bonsais have had huge success.

  • @9daywonda
    @9daywonda 17 дней назад +5

    It is nice to see such humbleness Sifu Chan, you are still young and have much time to learn new skills.

  • @mikec3820
    @mikec3820 16 дней назад +2

    one of my first bonsai 10 yr ago i started as a hard wood cutting. its now one of my nicest

  • @gariktv8756
    @gariktv8756 17 дней назад +9

    Whats the magic stuff from Taiwan ? 😊

  • @MAMLeers
    @MAMLeers 17 дней назад +2

    Very interesting. That thick - let's see what it brings. If you succeed, I might give it a try myself... Good luck, mr. Chan!

  • @carolholt416
    @carolholt416 17 дней назад +4

    Can't wait to see if they work!!! Thanks for video! Merry Christmas Sir!

  • @headingnorth5701
    @headingnorth5701 17 дней назад +1

    I didn't know this was possible. Fascinating. I hope it works.

  • @eddyibarra9585
    @eddyibarra9585 17 дней назад +3

    I love your videos always explain really good ! Your work is awesome !

  • @BGFOREVERFAN
    @BGFOREVERFAN 17 дней назад +1

    I love the small stihl chainsaw. I got one aswell for the gardening work and it helps a lot.

  • @michaelhayes1678
    @michaelhayes1678 4 дня назад

    Thank you so much for your videos!

  • @KennetDeBondt
    @KennetDeBondt 17 дней назад +1

    This makes my day.

  • @suer666
    @suer666 17 дней назад +5

    I have a maple that needs pruning 😂. My husband is not going to be happy. Im going to need a few new pots lol

  • @STP19
    @STP19 17 дней назад

    Sunday Morning. What a Glorious Thing to watch. Many Thanks. STP

  • @alfredomarotta6604
    @alfredomarotta6604 16 дней назад

    Merry Christmas. Happy, healthy, prosperous, blessed and wonderful New Year.

  • @Happy_Buddah_Bonsai_UK
    @Happy_Buddah_Bonsai_UK 17 дней назад +3

    Merry Christmas 🙏🏼🎄🙏🏼🎅🏻

  • @laddieokelley6095
    @laddieokelley6095 15 дней назад

    Peter, wishing you a healthy and prosperous new year. I have been told about successful propagation of quite large maples in Japan, but assumed my climate and skill level would not allow it. I do have a silverberry propagated by hardwood cutting in 2005, and smaller elm and ficus root readily for me.

  • @jamesa7506
    @jamesa7506 16 дней назад

    Hope they sprout and grow! Merry Christmas to you and your family. ✝️🇺🇲🙏

  • @MidniteSan
    @MidniteSan 17 дней назад +1

    Cool, thx for sharing Peter

  • @mariapilarme
    @mariapilarme 17 дней назад

    Very fun. I enjoyed watching it. Thanks ❤

  • @christopheaubertin2419
    @christopheaubertin2419 12 дней назад +1

    Hello. What about weeping Saul sap as hormone rooting?

  • @adampolacco7178
    @adampolacco7178 17 дней назад +3

    אחלה סירטון תודה.

  • @t3dwards13
    @t3dwards13 13 дней назад +1

    Willow is an easy way to start.
    My father-in-law cut some branches 3" in diameter and 3' long, and threw them in a ditch...They started leafing out, so he offered them to me.
    I buried them in the ground, and they grew without any rooting hormone.
    Supposedly they create their own.

  • @StephenTurnerVlogs
    @StephenTurnerVlogs 15 дней назад

    This will be cool to see.

  • @ALIREZAKAZEMITABRIZ
    @ALIREZAKAZEMITABRIZ 6 дней назад +1

    @peterchan3100, Thanks so much Peter, Could you please name the two products you used as rooting hormone (the powder and the drops)?

    • @peterchan3100
      @peterchan3100 4 дня назад

      It's a Taiwanese hormone rooting liquid - just has IBA in it - nothing special. Powder the same.

  • @shrory
    @shrory 16 дней назад

    Tried many times without success, apple cherry, beach, following this experiment with interest

  • @greatfurnitureptyltd4597
    @greatfurnitureptyltd4597 17 дней назад +1

    Hello, good to see you video❤

  • @JKG-777
    @JKG-777 16 дней назад

    Great video. I have a bunch of trees I need to trim back after the last growing season and now I have something to do with the parts I cut off. What is the material you use at 18:45 for the gritty material? Thanks.

  • @mMAmericanSpiritMm
    @mMAmericanSpiritMm 16 дней назад

    Thanks for the awesome video!
    I'd like to share a great trick I've found with those little stihl chainsaws. I have 3 for my orchard and the only major downside to them is the need to oil them by hand constantly. I found that adding a small amount of graphite powder to the oil vastly extends the time before it starts to jam up. You can even crush up the "lead" in pencils as a convenient source of graphite powder.
    Hope someone finds that helpful!

    • @peterchan3100
      @peterchan3100 16 дней назад

      I will certainly try your trick. Its a good little saw but - the battery doesn't hold its charge for long - it runs out very quickly.

  • @petrvranovsky5662
    @petrvranovsky5662 17 дней назад

    I'm really curious to see how it turns out. I tried a similar experiment and mold always appeared. I wish you much health and happiness in the new year Mr. Chan. 🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @joegarland4885
    @joegarland4885 17 дней назад

    Hi Peter, the only hard cuttings I have been successful with are Lonicera nitida, I managed to root a cutting around 1" and 2" thick stems. Look forward to the results.

  • @enricoferloni5249
    @enricoferloni5249 17 дней назад +1

    Come già detto ottima idea di vedere i video non conoscendo la lingua grazie.

  • @railspony
    @railspony 17 дней назад +1

    Cheap black spray paint is also an excellent sealant.

  • @tomcrookes5689
    @tomcrookes5689 9 дней назад +1

    Can I do hard wood cuttings now in late Dec early Jan?

    • @peterchan3100
      @peterchan3100 4 дня назад +1

      I was told Autumn and Spring are good times to do this.

  • @OrtoInScatola
    @OrtoInScatola 5 дней назад +1

    Hello, would you be so nice to share the channel of the British person you mentioned at the beginning of this video? Thanks!

  • @rRobertSmith
    @rRobertSmith 16 дней назад

    I have found that the aloe Vera I grow makes excellent root horm. to encourage roots.

  • @rowno12
    @rowno12 16 дней назад

    You should try doing some Dawn Redwood cuttings as well. I hear they root very easily from hardwood cuttings.

  • @lookatmysheeaat
    @lookatmysheeaat День назад

    What brand rooting hormone do you use? I don’t have a lot of luck with rooting cuttings

  • @JoeCangelosi-e3r
    @JoeCangelosi-e3r 16 дней назад

    This video is really interesting ! A few questions
    1. Why no light or air allowing into the styro boxes ?
    2. Why do this in early winter instead of say early/late spring ?
    3. Will you be watering periodically ? On what schedule ?
    Many thanks, Peter

    • @peterchan3100
      @peterchan3100 16 дней назад

      When the cuttings begin to sprout or grow (hopefully) in Spring - I will introduce light into the styro boxes and cover them with clear plastic.
      I have seen some American folks do it in Autumn and early Spring
      I will check the soil to make sure they dont dry out but they should not be kept too wet either.

  • @deepanjanbanerjee3491
    @deepanjanbanerjee3491 15 дней назад

    Is winter the right time to take cuttings- hardwood or softwood?

    • @peterchan3100
      @peterchan3100 15 дней назад +1

      Autumn and Spring is good for hardwood cuttings

  • @jcge1304
    @jcge1304 17 дней назад +1

    Ayuda mucho en tener los maderos húmedos de la parte inferior mientras se trabajan.

    • @walterwjr947
      @walterwjr947 17 дней назад

      Or make a "fresh" cut before applying the rooting harmone. It is very important to not break the osmotic column.

  • @zmblion
    @zmblion 14 дней назад

    Can you start an air layer and if its not ready or you end up forgetting or whatever can it survive winter or does it need to be cut and planted

  • @manuelabreu-w3k
    @manuelabreu-w3k 4 часа назад

    Can you tell me what brand of moss you use and how can I buy it?

  • @sergiopolanco5126
    @sergiopolanco5126 13 дней назад

    can you give the name of the 2 product you used for rooting hormone
    thanks

  • @Hollylivengood
    @Hollylivengood 15 дней назад +1

    Man, I've had only fails with hardwood cuttings. Watching this with baited breath.

  • @malsrfun2956
    @malsrfun2956 16 дней назад

    Interesting approach. Someone on the Bonsai Nut forum posted pictures of Michael Moreland's approach that involved cutting liter bottles in half and putting the substrate and cutting into the upside down top which sits in the bottom half where the water is, then putting the whole thing in a plastic bag. The picture may have been Moreland's trees, which the poster said were kept that way when not being shown. Let us know your results.

  • @page4938
    @page4938 11 дней назад +1

    What is the Name from that stuff from Taiwan?

  • @SultonBonsai
    @SultonBonsai 16 дней назад

    Indonesia hadir...om

  • @brucedeacon28
    @brucedeacon28 9 дней назад +1

    👍👌🙂

  • @brendancahill3376
    @brendancahill3376 11 дней назад +1

    I cant see anyone of those Maple cuttings rooting .Maybe if they had bottom heat you may get some to root.

  • @highwayjim6672
    @highwayjim6672 17 дней назад +1

    You don't water the cuttings?

    • @peterchan3100
      @peterchan3100 16 дней назад +1

      Yes you do need to water them in but just to keep it moist - Dont overwater.

    • @samanthasutherland2969
      @samanthasutherland2969 3 дня назад

      They're watered initially and then kept covered so the condensation and humidity keeps them moist over winter.

  • @GhostofTradition
    @GhostofTradition 17 дней назад

    ficus cutting are nearly 100% success rate for me. probably the easiest species to root.

    • @peterchan3100
      @peterchan3100 16 дней назад +1

      In the tropics - Ficus, Bougainvillea and Hibiscus are very easy to strike from thick cuttings. I used to do this as a boy.

  • @johntomkins1873
    @johntomkins1873 6 часов назад

    When I started out in bonsai in the late 80's every time I trimmed a tree I would use the pieces as cuttings. And I used to get about 90-95% success rate. When people asked me what I planted them in I would say ordinary compost from ASDA. These days I do not get anything like that as a success rate. It only dawned on me recently what the answer might be. What I refered to as "ordiary compost from ASDA" was actualy sphagnum moss peat and you simply can't get that today. The compost available today, to put it bluntly, is rubbish by comparison.

  • @MartinaBrigitteZimmer-Heil
    @MartinaBrigitteZimmer-Heil 17 дней назад

    😊❤👍

  • @harrismohammad5009
    @harrismohammad5009 12 дней назад +2

    Anyone else noticed the shadow of a person?

    • @dylldobaggins4594
      @dylldobaggins4594 9 дней назад +1

      We call that the camera man*. 😉
      * Other pronouns are available.

  • @FernandoMedina-yu5lf
    @FernandoMedina-yu5lf 17 дней назад

    👍🍁🍊🎅🏻🎅🏻

  • @bubxxl7963
    @bubxxl7963 14 дней назад

    Vous nous faites chier avec vos titres en français...
    Putaclic

    • @OrtoInScatola
      @OrtoInScatola 5 дней назад

      @@bubxxl7963 there is no title in French. It’s RUclips translating the titles in your language. No need to use that language